Archive for Therapy

What appears below is my initial response

to a meeting I attended yesterday (February 10th).  

This ‘response’ will undoubtedly grow, change and be tweaked

in the coming weeks

as I sculpture my thoughts through the passage of time

and through a deeper understanding.

 My own fields of expertise and specialization are unique.

Hopefully this will come across by way of what I am saying here.

 What I say here is not, in the slightest, intended to offend.

Whatever your feelings might be after having read what I have to say,

please check out other areas of this site. 

I am sure you will find this useful, helpful and quite fascinating! 

As my time at my pc desk is limited 

I will ongoingly drip-feed my knoweldge into this article… 

 

Yesterday I attended a meeting where a number of island school teachers met with members of “Oak House” including the ‘resident doctor’. 

The topic of this meeting centred around how to deal with ADHD within schools and although I only caught thirty minutes or so of the meeting (missing both the beginning and the end) I did pick up upon a number of points/issues that re-enforced my knowledge that what I have to offer  - authentic Chinese Martial Arts including Taijiquan (Tai Chi) – is an essential and vital discipline for all school curriculums to take on-board as it ticks a seemingly endless list of boxes that should be every school’s “to do” list.     

I do appreciate that most people do not know what real Chinese Martial Arts/Taijiquan are because the way that these disciplines are generally taught/portrayed here on the island is a far and distant cry from what they truly are! The general perception is one of two extremes – senseless violence or shallow aesthetics. Neither of these perceptions is accurate, healthy or useful.

This  is not what they are this is not what I teach!

Each week I teach my junior Kungfu programme (“Young Dragons”) to approximately 100 youngsters aged from four to fourteen. Not all of these youngsters are ADHD-diagnosed. Some are whilst some have been diagnosed with or have suspected Autism, Dyslexia, Dyspraxia or Asperger’s Syndrome.

I teach either at my martial arts academy in Ryde (“THE MARSTA” located within “St. John’s Annexe”) or at a number of schools namely, “St. Mary’s Primary” in Ryde, “The Priory” in Luccombe and “Barton Primary” in Newport. At these schools I am either teaching within curriculum time or immediately after the school day. At Somerton Middle School in West Cowes I am teaching on a Saturday morning where my students are not limited to being just Somerton Middle School youngsters. At all my classes parents and teachers are invited/encouraged to sit and watch so that they, too, can understand where I am coming from.

What I teach I call “Physical Chinese Medicine” because this is what it is. It is what I have learnt over the past thirty-six years during my lengthy periods living, working, training and researching in China, South-East Asia and the USA.  

The USP of what I teach is that it is a prophylactic (preventative) medicine as well as being a corrective, curative, reparatory and rejuvenative exercise. What I teach is not a sport and never will I ever teach it as such because sport is very much over-rated here in the Western World as its damaging properties continue to go unrecognized. But as the nation is brainwashed into thinking that sport it harmless then nothing is going to change on that front. But I do know its shortcomings and I also know that what I teach is a way to offset these negativities so that balance can be achieved and thus maintained.  

I do not expect you to understand everything I am saying here but by way of the “ancient, classical and traditional martial arts” such topics as holist health, natural therapy, quality of life and longevity are my areas of expertise. As a practitioner, researcher and promoter of these disciplines and knowing what I do about Eastern and Western medicine I need to be working closely with teachers, parents and carers if we are going to radically and drastically change, for the better, and raise the quality of life of ADHD-diagnosed youngsters who seem, today, to have no other alternative but drugs and other such superficial treatment.  

To be continued.

Comments (0)

image11 lion

“Eyes like an eagle, mouth like a lion!”

This is how REAL KUNGFU truly is. It is an awesome practice and “an holistic medicine” overshadowed by the ’exercise/fighting’ cliche and diluted, in appearance, by everyday mundane terms such as ’sport’, ‘hobby’ and ‘interests’.

In ancient China REAL KUNGFU was practiced by 10% of the nation’s population! 

Practiced correctly and diligently REAL KUNG FU is the most powerful of all disciplines and untouchable by any other  personal practice available to the general public.

image 20 me

REAL KUNGFU can be scary to the observer yet beautiful for the practitioner – the one looking from the inside inwards rather than the one looking from the outside at the outside.

In principle, REAL KUNGFU can be practiced by anyone…yet not just anyone can actually ‘do’ Kung Fu.  Just a microscopic minority!

The world in which we now live is a fast-pace world hell-bent on deadlines, cosmetics, ego, vanity, greed, avarice, laziness, quick fixes, illusion and delusion.  In order to break away from this one has to undergo a severe re-education process.

Not everyone can do this for not everyone is prepared to undergo the personal sacrifice required in order to be successful in this self-set quest. Not everyone wants to do this and not everyone understands the need to do this.

image 21 me

REAL KUNGFU is not about training but about RE-training: learning how to breath properly, walk properly, sit properly, move properly, think properly…live properly.

If you are not afraid to be different, unique, free from the crowd and ‘not of the general mould’ then REAL KUNGFU might be for you however…one only gets out what one puts in.

REAL KUNGFU will put you on your own unique path that will reshape your life. It will give you incredible strength, boundless energy, enormous confidence and self-belief. It will get you fit and keep you fit.  All things being relative it will give you super-human strength, for this is what it was indeed to do when it was first created all those centuries ago and all those thousands of miles away in a land and at a time time when Longevity was acheivable and not just the dream and ‘hopeless cause’ that it is today.

REAL KUNGFU is available to you now.

It is called SANSHANGONG.

It is real, genuine and authentic.

It is physical, mental and spiritual.

It is practical, functional and attainable.

I teach it, I research it, I study it , I preserve it, I promote it, I practice it and I live it. Seven days week, 247.

If you are interested – for yourself or for someone else…call me.

07877 960 799   

 

Aug
05

“Kaizen Massage”

Posted by: Simon Lailey | Comments (0)

image 3 massage images

Recently I have qualified as an internationally-recognized Masseur.  Having studied ”Swedish Massage” at college I have since incorporated Oriental Massage (largely this is what Swedish Massage is although upon a very superficial level)  and Oriental Medicine into my own personal and individualized practice making it far more in-depth and also holistic. In this way, in addition to the Swedish Massage technique that is my foundation, I am embracing relevant aspects of Indian Head Massage, Reflexology, Indian Ayuveda Medicine, Traditional Chinese Medicine, Taijiquan (Tai Chi), Qigong, Tuina and Shiatsu. Uniquely I am also drawing upon my in-depth knowledge of Kungfu, Karate and india Kalarippayattu Martial Arts as I take my massage into a new and unparalelled dimension!

image kaizen kanji

I call my massage practice “Kaizen”. This is a Japanese concept reflecting adaption, improvement and progression. “Kaizen” (for which the Japanese character apears above) acknowledges the fact that advancement is very often achieved in a gradual, step-by-step manner rather than by way of leaps and bounds. It is  a philosophy that stresses daily improvement, patience and persverence through the application of science together with a systematic methodology as one monitors results in an bid to work towards self-improvement.

The “Kaizen” concept is, indeed, very deep and has a great deal in common with the true meaning of Chinese Kungfu which is my greatest passion.

“Kaizen Massage” treatments are available at The MARSTA at a cost of £15 for a thirty-minute (specific and targeted) massage, and £25 for a full-body massage. House calls are available at  a slightly higher rate.

Each treatment at The MARSTA is performed upon a proper massage couch and in strict privacy although minors will need to have an adult with them. Oils are used to enhance the massage whilst traditional Oriental music plays in the background in order to enhance the relaxed atmosphere. Chinese tea is available (optional) as this is also an intrinsic part of the treatment.

To book a massage please call Simon on 07877 960 799.

Categories : Essays, The MARSTA, Therapy
Comments (0)

aaron1

For a year and a half I was teaching Sanshangong to Aaron Danvers-Jukes.

Aaron has been blind from birth yet when I visited students of the Ryde-based “Mayfleld Middle School” where I gave a presentation on self-defence via Sanshangong, Aaron’s hand was one of the first to shoot up into the air when I asked if anyone was keen to learn this martial art.
“I’m blind”, said Aaron, “but I would like to learn. Can you teach me?”

The answer I gave was “yes” and so from that point onwards and for eighteen months Aaron learnt from me one once a week upon a private one-to-one basis. Of the seventeen youngsters from that school that also leant from me (but as an after-school club) only Aaron actually remained with me for a seriously length of time. But as he moved on up to High School his school work got in the way and so he was forced to take a lengthy break.

But now he is back! 

aaron2

A young man and with school now behind him, Aaron is back with me and is now learning Taijiquan (Tai Chi) alongside his kungfu training and he is loving both art-forms! Read More→

Comments (0)
Mar
22

Martial Arts For Autistic Youngsters

Posted by: admin | Comments (0)

autism_teachingRecently I have taught self-defence (by way of traditional Chinese Martial Arts) to a number of very young Autistic boys.

The class was small (numbering between three to six students per one-hour session over a five-week period) and the experience (for me) was good albeit very different to what I am accustomed with other young boys. This was because the boys with autism had needs and concerns that  seemed somewhat apart or separate from other minors of the same age bracket. Now I am teaching a small number of autistic youngsters (boys) upon a regular basis.

In the past I have taught young autistic boys on a one-to-one basis sometimes not even knowing that they were autistic because, for me at that time, it had been an unheard of term. Unheard of not just for me but also for the parents who had not been aware of the condition within their youngsters. Autism is a relatively “new” word (and a very complex one at that!) for both the general public and for the medics (apparently) which, I guess, accounts for why such a diagnosis may well be go unrecognized. At least for some time. Read More→

Categories : News, Therapy
Comments (0)

 

February 2012
M T W T F S S
« Jan    
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
272829